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In perhaps one of biggest ironies to ever to come out of Washington, this
week Congress simultaneously pilloried major league baseball players for using
artificial stimulants to pump up their performance while passing legislation
to do just that to the national economy. Am I the only one laughing?
In reality, the current slump in the U.S. economy is simply the come down
from years of financial doping in the form of skyrocketing home values and
easy credit. Rather than reaching for yet another syringe, Congress should
ask Americans to do what it demands of ballplayers: play within their natural
means. Unfortunately in the case of the economy, the patient is already so
juiced up that further doses may not only fail to stimulate but may result
in a trip to the emergency room.
As the widely praised "economic stimulus" bill was signed into law, the only
dissent heard was from those saying the plan did not go far enough. Speaking
for those unheard voices who disagree with the strategy entirely, I believe
the most significant aspect of the plan is that it creates a new and improved
method for delivering inflation.
Previously, the government has largely relied on interest rate stimulus to
keep the economy humming. In this method, money supply growth, also known as
inflation, is channeled through the banking system. The Fed makes cheap credit
available to banks, which then lend out the new funds or use them to acquire
higher yielding assets. As a result, asset prices, such as stocks, bonds and
real estate, have been bid up to bubble levels. However, the inflationary impact
on consumer prices occurs with a considerable lag.
Now that rate cuts alone are proving insufficient, mainly because banks are
now so over-loaded with questionable collateral and shaky loans that few can
consider acquiring more assets or extending additional credit (no matter how
cheap such activities can be funded), the Government is opting for a more direct
approach. By printing money and mailing it directly to the citizenry, the "stimulus
plan" cuts out all of the financial middle men and administers the inflation
drug directly to consumers.
If simply printing money could solve financial problems, the Fed could send
$10 million to every citizen and we could all retire en masse to Barbados.
However, more money chasing a given supply of goods simply pushes up prices
and does nothing to improve underlying economics. Since this new money will
go directly into consumer spending, without first being filtered thought asset
markets, the effects on consumer prices will be far more immediate.
This politically inspired placebo will do nothing to cure what ails our economy.
The additional consumer spending will merely exacerbate our imbalances, allow
the underlying problems to worsen, and put additional upward pressure on both
consumer prices and eventually long-term interest rates as well. The failure
of the stimulus plan to cure the economy will cause the Government, and the
Wall Street brain trust, to conclude that it was simply too small. Their next
solution will be to administer an even stronger dose.
My prediction is that over the course of the next few years, successive doses
of even larger stimulus packages will fail to revive the economy. As the recession
worsens and the dollar drops through the floor and consumer prices and long-term
interest rates shoot thought the roof, politicians and economists will look
for scapegoats. Few, if any, will properly attribute the problems to the toxic
effects of the stimulus itself.
However, like all drugs, the biggest danger is an overdose. In monetary terms
an overdose is hyperinflation, which will surely kill our economy. It is my
sincere hope that before we reach that "point of no return," a correct diagnosis
is finally made. When that occurs, the stimulants will be cut off, and the
free market will finally be allowed to administer the only cure that works:
recession. If that means we lose some speed on our fastball, so be it. Maybe
we could use a few months in the minor leagues to get back to basics. While
we may not like the economic side effects of stopping cold turkey, it sure
beats carrying our money around in wheelbarrows!
For a more in depth analysis of our financial problems and the inherent dangers
they pose for the U.S. economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read
my new book "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse." Click here to
order a copy today.
More importantly, while you may hope for the best, you must make sure to prepare
for the worst. Protect your wealth and preserve your purchasing power before
it's too late.
Discover the best way to buy gold at www.goldyoucanfold.com,
download my free research report on the powerful case for investing in foreign
equities available at www.researchreportone.com,
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